On the demand side, exporters and strategic planners focusing on vegetable saps and extracts in Australia face a number of questions. Which countries are supplying vegetable saps and extracts to Australia? How important is Australia compared to others in terms of the entire global and regional market? How much do the imports of vegetable saps and extracts vary from one country of origin to another in Australia? On the supply side, Australia also exports vegetable saps and extracts. Which countries receive the most exports from Australia? How are these exports concentrated across buyers? What is the value of these exports and which countries are the largest buyers?
This report was created for strategic planners, international marketing executives and import/export managers who are concerned with the market for vegetable saps and extracts in Australia. With the globalization of this market, managers can no longer be contented with a local view. Nor can managers be contented with out-of-date statistics which appear several years after the fact. I have developed a methodology, based on macroeconomic and trade models, to estimate the market for vegetable saps and extracts for those countries serving Australia via exports, or supplying from Australia via imports. It does so for the current year based on a variety of key historical indicators and econometric models.
In what follows, Chapter 2 begins by summarizing where Australia fits into the world market for imported and exported vegetable saps and extracts. The total level of imports and exports on a worldwide basis, and those for Australia in particular, is estimated using a model which aggregates across over 150 key country markets and projects these to the current year. From there, each country represents a percent of the world market. This market is served from a number of competitive countries of origin. Based on both demand- and supply-side dynamics, market shares by



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